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Topic: Sausage crumbles (Read 22636 times)

Hi guys. I have read this forum for years and am just now posting for the first time. I am looking for somewhere to buy sausage crumbles online similar to pizza inn or the old school pizza hut. I have previously bought the Tyson boncini brand but it's flavor wasn't what I was looking for. The problem I am running into is that most of the sausage crumbles are only sold through a distributor. I guess it's a Midwest thing, but my family and friends prefer this type of sausage to real Italian sausage. Thanks for the years of help and making my pizza the best it's ever been.

I personally like the real thing. I think you will have to go through a distributor. If I were you I would find a pizza place that has the kind that suits you and ask them to go halves on a case. Can't imagine they would have an problem with that.

Hi guys. I have read this forum for years and am just now posting for the first time. I am looking for somewhere to buy sausage crumbles online similar to pizza inn or the old school pizza hut. I have previously bought the Tyson boncini brand but it's flavor wasn't what I was looking for. The problem I am running into is that most of the sausage crumbles are only sold through a distributor. I guess it's a Midwest thing, but my family and friends prefer this type of sausage to real Italian sausage. Thanks for the years of help and making my pizza the best it's ever been.

... I have previously bought the Tyson boncini brand but it's flavor wasn't what I was looking for. Luke

Several times I have bought Jimmy Dean sausage breakfast patties (pre cooked) they are easy to crumble and although not Italian sausage, I and the family love it. Plus they keep in the fridge and are ready to go in a minutes notice...

We used to call it "Kibbles 'n' Bits" when I worked in the business. I always preferred real Italian sausage, but to each his own.

I don't use it, but I know a lot of people like Fontanini sausage topping. It's usually only sold wholesale, but PennMac vacuum seals smaller quantities and sells to the public: http://www.pennmac.com/items/4577/

A great way to kibble or crumble cook sausage is to buy it in a chubb. Take a 1 gal. freezer ziplock bag and stuff the sausage in it. Use it as a piping bag. Cut a dime size hole in one corner, and extrude the sausage through the hole. As the sausage exits in snake like fashion, whack it off with scissors in whatever size crumble/ kibble you want. Bake them off in the oven and they're ready to go. I guess the hard-core guys put them on raw. MDW would never go for that.

The piping bag is a great way to make hush puppies en masse also. Just a bigger size hole and straight into the grease they go.

Thanks for the replies guys. I have tried the fontanini from pennmac and didn't really care for it. I have tried the pre cooked stuff as well and I couldn't get it to "crumble" to the right texture when cooked. I have tried making my own, but haven't really found an amazing recipe yet. I have tried slicing real Italian sausage, putting it on raw in pinches, and lightly pre cooking it in small chunks. So far I still haven't found " the one" yet. I would love to hear what you guys are using as your favorite sausage, regardless of type. Here is what I have been using.

I would love to hear what you guys are using as your favorite sausage, regardless of type.

I make my own sausage. I often will make a large batch and stuff some in hog casings and keep some unstuffed for pizza. I just pick 'n' flick it on the pizza raw. as long as you don't use too big of gobs, it will cook fine. It could also be par-cooked.

I make my own sausage. I often will make a large batch and stuff some in hog casings and keep some unstuffed for pizza. I just pick 'n' flick it on the pizza raw. as long as you don't use too big of gobs, it will cook fine. It could also be par-cooked.

I tryed Homel buttt very high in price for a very small bag.I buy my tiny sausage from my distributor (Bova food},it comes at $30 for a 30lbs5 6lb bags of tinny bits of sausage(not bad and at a great price}I keep each bag that I use frozen and use it when I need it...............JT

GFS, they have bulk sausage crumbles.. to me they taste like fluffed up cardboard, but I am sure they are on a lot of different kinds of food. When I purchased a case few years ago, my dogs ate well for a couple of months. Maybe its changed, would not bet on it.

I make my own sausage. I often will make a large batch and stuff some in hog casings and keep some unstuffed for pizza. I just pick 'n' flick it on the pizza raw. as long as you don't use too big of gobs, it will cook fine. It could also be par-cooked.

* This is fairly hot. You can cut back on the red pepper to cool it down. Not all crushed red pepper flakes are the same though. I have had jars that were much hotter than others.

Well, nice to meet another sausage maker. I will try your recipe this weekend. I never came up with a recipe that I liked. Mixed and doctored just about everything from the store and made many test batches. thanks for sharing will give it a try.

I make my own sausage. I often will make a large batch and stuff some in hog casings and keep some unstuffed for pizza. I just pick 'n' flick it on the pizza raw. as long as you don't use too big of gobs, it will cook fine. It could also be par-cooked.

* This is fairly hot. You can cut back on the red pepper to cool it down. Not all crushed red pepper flakes are the same though. I have had jars that were much hotter than others.

Oh this thing just lost all my text... ugg..... on a repost..

I made a 1lb test batch of your pizza sausage, have not used it on a pizza yet, but the flavors are very good. Tonight during the bears game going to try it on a pie.. going to make tom lehmann NY pizza and give it a whirl. You did not say to crush or whole seed or pwd. I used just seeds? Will post a update. Picture is some home made polish sausage I made while making your pizza sausage test batch. thanks for sharing will update.

In my experience, TVP is used for formula cost reduction and to hit nutritional targets rather than texture improvement which I would disagree is a benefit it adds.

I would disagree. (At least on"improvement", just cost reduction) I was just back home after near 4 years, and went to my favorite little hole, dump of a cafe for their greasy, nasty delicious burger. I was served a pate of TVP and burger. 5 bucks great. I would rather pay 8 for what they used to serve. I was just thinking, in my experience, the sausage "balls" pizza topping was the spongy,cheap TVP crap. (Like my burger) large restaurant suppliers provide. I think it adds a definite, unusual texture.. The fat stays suspended. Quite nasty. But maybe what he is after.

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Texture is improved and moisture loss is reduced.

I did know that. But I do freeze every thing before using. Does it make a difference with brats? The fat content is so high, I thought it was all about emulsion?

I would disagree. (At least on"improvement", just cost reduction) I was just back home after near 4 years, and went to my favorite little hole, dump of a cafe for their greasy, nasty delicious burger. I was served a pate of TVP and burger. 5 bucks great. I would rather pay 8 for what they used to serve. I was just thinking, in my experience, the sausage "balls" pizza topping was the spongy,cheap TVP crap. (Like my burger) large restaurant suppliers provide. I think it adds a definite, unusual texture.. The fat stays suspended. Quite nasty. But maybe what he is after.

I'm not sure I understand where you disagree? Are you saying that you think TVP improves the texture of ground meat?

Logged

"We make great pizza, with sourdough when we can, commercial yeast when we must, but always great pizza." Craig's Neapolitan Garage

I disagree with SinoChef's disagreement of Craig's disagreement of SinoChef original statement.

My sister is a vegetarian and she buys TVP in bulk. Nobody else in our family is vegetarian, including my sister's husband (poor guy), so when we have a gathering at her house she makes non-vegetarian fare. Just this summer she had a cookout and made her "famous" hamburgers that are made with ground beef and various other ingredients, including TVP. She proudly claims that the TVP improves the texture of the burger. Personally, I'm not sure what's wrong with the texture of a burger made with just ground beef, but she claims that the TVP improves it. I think she's crazy. To me, the texture of the TVP burger was pasty and kind of bean-like. It left an unpleasant coating in my mouth that I couldn't wait to rinse down with a beer. The burger was well-seasoned, which was the only reason it was at all palatable IMO.

I think it mushes the meat while cutting, if froz you get a much more clean cut as well has sharp blades. Make a big differences in cured raw sausage, you get the nice looking chunks of meat when you cut into the sasuage. If it is not froz or your blades are not sharp, kind of mushes it all togehter. Hamburger, not really sure you could tell the texture differences, you might though. It would be like changing different size plate holes.

Hi, Luke....don't know if you are still looking for the "rabbit pellet" looking sausage pieces still, but I too am a fan of those. Sacrilege I know, but I grew up with that type sausage and you know what they say about your first pizza love.......

Anyway, I have finally found them at my local Restaurant Depot in the frozen section. Cannot tell you the brand but there is only one and it comes in a five pound bag, two to a case. They let me break a case and I just freeze it in Foodsaver bags portioned out.

If you don't have access to a RD, for years I was forced to go to a local pizzeria that used that kind of topping and they would sell me a pound or two at a time. Maybe someone near you will have mercy on you as well.

LOL! I didn't mean I WOULDN'T give you the name, just that I couldn't....I threw the box away 2 months ago and don't remember. I will make a run to RD in the next few days anyway and will look for you and report back. They also carry other pizzamaking things and I'll make a short list if anyone is interested. Hold tight, fellow sausage lover, I will not forsake you!